My daughter spent years hiding behind a heavy orthodontic frame.
So when the most popular boy at school asked her to prom, I thought maybe life was finally giving her something beautiful. But halfway through the dance, she ran across the gym crying and shouted, “You paid him to take me, didn’t you?”
For two years, Elsie had worn a complicated orthodontic frame.
The kids at school called it “robot gear.” After that, she stopped smiling in pictures.
Then one afternoon, she came home glowing.
“Mom, Mason asked me to prom! He said I looked beautiful.”
Tears filled my eyes.
Everyone in town knew Mason. He was the star quarterback, a good student, and the kind of polite boy adults trusted.
I wanted to believe he might be good for her.
When your child has spent years making herself small, and suddenly the golden boy looks at her like she matters, you don’t want to suspect cruelty.
You want to believe the happy version.
Maybe part of me wanted it for myself too.
I had raised Elsie alone since the night her father abandoned me at my own prom. Darren smiled for pictures, danced with me twice, then disappeared before midnight. His last words were that he wasn’t ready to be a father.
So yes, I wanted Elsie to have the magical prom night I never got.
When Mason arrived in a dark suit, nervous smile on his face and a white boutonniere on his jacket, some wounded part of me thought maybe this was where our story finally changed.
Elsie came downstairs in a pale green dress. I had curled her hair and pinned one side back with my grandmother’s pearl clip.
She looked beautiful.
The prom was held in the school gym, decorated as nicely as a small-town budget allowed. Parents stood along the walls, pretending not to hover. Teachers smiled too brightly. The DJ tried his best.
I stayed because Elsie asked me to.
For the first hour, everything seemed perfect.
Mason held her hand, brought her punch, and leaned close whenever she spoke, as if every word mattered.
At one point, Elsie laughed without covering her mouth.
I had to look away before I cried.
Then the slow song began.
Mason led her onto the dance floor with one hand at her waist. Elsie looked nervous, but happy.
Then he bent down and whispered something near her ear.
Elsie froze.
He said something else.
She pulled away and stared at him.
Then she ripped her hand from his and marched straight toward me.
Her face was flushed, her eyes already full of tears.
My stomach dropped.
“Elsie? What happened?”
She stopped a few feet away, breathing hard.
“How could you?” she said.
I froze. “What?”
“You paid him, didn’t you?” Her voice cracked so loudly the nearby conversations stopped. “You felt sorry for me, so you paid Mason to pretend he liked me.”
Everyone turned.
I felt the blood drain from my face.
“No,” I whispered. “Sweetheart, no. I swear I didn’t.”
Her mouth trembled.
“Then why would he say that?”
I reached for her, but she stepped back.
“Elsie, listen to me.”
“Don’t,” she said, her voice shaking. “Just don’t.”
Then she turned and walked away.
I was about to follow her when Mason appeared beside me.
For one second, I thought he had come to apologize.
Instead, he leaned close and said, “I did my part. Now it’s your turn.”
I stared at him.
“What deal?”
His jaw tightened. He glanced toward Elsie, then toward the hallway near the stage.
“Don’t make a scene. Come with me.”
I should have called the principal right then.
Instead, I followed him.
Mason led me down the dim hallway past the trophy case and music room. He stopped at a small supply closet behind the stage and opened the door.
Inside, under a flickering light, a man sat hunched on an overturned bucket.
At first, I only saw gray hair and tired shoulders.
Then he lifted his head.
“YOU?” I shouted. “You did this? How could you?”
Darren stood so quickly he nearly hit the shelf behind him.
“Rachel, I can explain—”
“No. You don’t get to explain. You left me and Elsie the night you walked out of my prom. And now you used a teenage boy to manipulate your own daughter? What could you possibly say to justify that?”
Mason flinched.
Darren frowned.
“I didn’t hire him. Not exactly. We made an arrangement. But that’s not the point. I did this because I needed one chance to talk to her.”
I stared at him, too stunned to speak.